Quantum Thermalization and Localization in a Trapped Ion Quantum Simulator
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Abstract
When a system thermalizes it loses all memory of its initial conditions. Even
within a closed quantum system, subsystems usually thermalize using the rest of
the system as a heat bath. Exceptions to quantum thermalization have been observed,
but typically require inherent symmetries or noninteracting particles in the
presence of static disorder. The prediction of many-body localization (MBL), in
which disordered quantum systems can fail to thermalize despite strong interactions
and high excitation energy, was therefore surprising and has attracted considerable
theoretical attention. We experimentally generate MBL states by applying an Ising
Hamiltonian with long-range interactions and programmably random disorder to
ten spins initialized far from equilibrium with respect to the Hamiltonian. Using
experimental and numerical methods we observe the essential signatures of MBL:
initial state memory retention, Poissonian distributed many-body energy level spacings,
and evidence of long-time entanglement growth. Our platform can be scaled
to more spins, where detailed modeling of MBL becomes impossible.